@bufferapp/comparison-chart
v1.55.0
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The comparison chart for Buffer Analyze
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@bufferapp/audience-comparison-chart
The audience comparison chart for Buffer Analyze
Quick Start
Start Storybook
If you're interested in working on or observing how things look, starting with React Storybook is a great way to get going. It's setup to automatically reload as the code changes to make it easy to do rapid iteration on components.
npm start
After that copy and paste the host and port that is displayed on the console into a browser.
Developing Multiple Packages In Parallel
If you're running this for multiple packages at the same time, it's helpful to pass in the port number.
npm start -- --port 8003
Run Tests
Tests are run using Jest and UIs are tested and locked down using Jest Snapshots and React Storybook.
Standard Tests
Runs linter, then unit and snapshot tests. These tests are run using CI and are currently running on TravisCI:
https://travis-ci.com/bufferapp/buffer-publish
npm test
Watch Mode
When writing unit tests for things like middleware and the main index file, it's useful to only run the test that change so you can rapidly iterate. Jest watch mode allows you do do this with a single command:
npm run test-watch
Package Anatomy
A UI package should include all concerns related to a given feature.
audience-comparison-chart/ # root
+-- __snapshots__/
`-- snapshot.test.js.snap # jest snapshots storage
+-- .storybook/ # React Storybook Configuration
`-- addons.js # storybook action panel configuration
`-- config.js # storybook main configuration
`-- preview-head.html # configure <head> in storybook preview
+-- components/ # presentational components
+-- AudienceComparisonChart # component that is only used in the package
`-- index.jsx # implementation of the component
`-- story.jsx # description of all the possible configurations of the component
`-- .babelrc # babel transpiler
`-- index.js # main package file, should export the container and top level resources
`-- index.test.js # main package file tests
`-- middleware.js # all action side effects
`-- middleware.test.js # test action side effects
`-- package.json # npm package
`-- README.md # you are here
`-- reducer.js # describe how data changes when actions occur
`-- reducer.test.js # test the reducer!
`-- snapshot.test.js # configure jest snapshots
index.js
This is the main package file, it's default export should be the container.
Imagine another package is trying to use the package you're building. The package API should look like this:
import AudienceComparisonChart, { actions, actionTypes, middleware, reducer } from '@bufferapp/audience-comparison-chart';
components/
Presentational components (pure ui) are implemented with the followign structure:
+-- components/
+-- AudienceComparisonChart/
`-- index.jsx
`-- story.jsx
components/AudienceComparisonChart/index.jsx
This should export a functional and stateless component. There are some special cases where handling things like focus
, hover
and active states that need to be tracked.
If you need focus
and or hover
take a look at PseudoClassComponent to wrap the component you're building:
https://github.com/bufferapp/buffer-components/blob/master/PseudoClassComponent/index.jsx
Here's an example of how to wrap a Button
:
https://github.com/bufferapp/buffer-components/blob/master/Button/index.jsx
components/AudienceComparisonChart/story.jsx
This should set the context (properties) for every configuration of the component in index.jsx
. The story is used for both React Storybook
as well as Jest Snapshots
.